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I need to set the text within a DIV element dynamically. What is the best, browser safe approach? I have prototypejs and scriptaculous available.

<div id="panel">
  <div id="field_name">TEXT GOES HERE</div>
</div>

Here's what the function will look like:

function showPanel(fieldName) {
  var fieldNameElement = document.getElementById('field_name');
  //Make replacement here
}
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56% accept rate
Does the accepted answer do what you want it to when assigned text like is:- <span style="font-size:36pt">This is big</span>. If this behaviour is desirable then can you re-phrase the question to match? – AnthonyWJones Sep 23 '08 at 16:13

8 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

I would use Prototype's update method which supports plain text, an HTML snippet or any JavaScript object that defines a toString method.

$("field_name").update("New text");
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vote up 4 vote down
$('field_name').innerHTML = 'Your text.';

One of the nifty features of Prototype is that $('field_name') does the same thing as document.getElementById('field_name'). Use it! :-)

John Topley's answer using Prototype's update function is another good solution.

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That doesn't look like JavaScript? – Milan Babuškov Sep 23 '08 at 15:42
It is JavaScript. See prototypejs.org/api/utility – ceejayoz Sep 23 '08 at 15:43
Don't use innerHTML. It's not a w3c recommendation and behaves inconsistently. It's considered bad style. – Tom Sep 23 '08 at 15:54
Tom, what should be used instead (if you don't use Prototype)? – Milan Babuškov Sep 23 '08 at 16:19
Milan, the more accepted way is to loop through the childNodes, call removeNode(true) on each, then append new nodes created using document.createElement() or document.createTextNode(). If you need to do that I would recommend writing a function to avoid a lot of typing. – Joel Anair Sep 24 '08 at 15:13
vote up 3 vote down

Should just be

fieldNameElement.innerHTML = "Ny new text!";
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Shouldn't single quotes be used for 'static' text? – Milan Babuškov Sep 23 '08 at 15:45
In PHP, yes. In JavaScript, I don't believe it matters. – ceejayoz Sep 23 '08 at 15:45
In Javascript, single and double quotes are interchangeable. – 17 of 26 Sep 23 '08 at 15:49
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If you really want us to just continue where you left off, you could do:

if (fieldNameElement)
    fieldNameElement.innerHTML = 'some HTML';
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vote up 0 vote down
function showPanel(fieldName) {
  var fieldNameElement = document.getElementById(field_name);

  fieldNameElement.removeChild(fieldNameElement.firstChild);
  var newText = document.createTextNode("New Text");
  fieldNameElement.appendChild(newText);
}
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Better to replace the node then to remove it and add a new one as two separate operations. – David Dorward Sep 23 '08 at 16:01
vote up 1 vote down

The quick answer is to use innerHTML (or prototype's update method which pretty much the same thing). The problem with innerHTML is you need to escape the content being assigned. Depending on your targets you will need to do that with other code OR

in IE:-

document.getElementById("field_name").innerText = newText;

in FF:-

document.getElementById("field_name").textContent = newText;

(Actually of FF have the following present in by code)

HTMLElement.prototype.__defineGetter__("innerText", function () { return this.textContent; })

HTMLElement.prototype.__defineSetter__("innerText", function (inputText) { this.textContent = inputText; })

Now I can just use innerText if you need widest possible browser support then this is not a complete solution but neither is using innerHTML in the raw.

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vote up 5 vote down

function showPanel(fieldName) {
  var fieldNameElement = document.getElementById("field_name");
  while(fieldNameElement.childNodes.length >= 1) {
    fieldNameElement.removeChild(fieldNameElement.firstChild);
  }
  fieldNameElement.appendChild(fieldNameElement.ownerDocument.createTextNode(fieldName));
}

The advantages of doing it this way:

  1. It only uses the DOM, so the technique is portable to other languages, and doesn't rely on the non-standard innerHTML
  2. fieldName might contain HTML, which could be an attempted XSS attack. If we know it's just text, we should be creating a text node, instead of having the browse parse it for HTML

If I were going to use a javascript library, I'd use jQuery, and do this:


  $("div#field_name").text(fieldName);

Note that AnthonyWJones in the comment is correct, and "field_name" isn't a particularly descriptive id and fieldName isn't a particularly descriptive variable name that contains the text.

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Which other languages could you port this technique to? – John Topley Sep 23 '08 at 15:54
Any language with a DOM implementation supports this (and most languages have a DOM implementation). – David Dorward Sep 23 '08 at 16:01
This is good answer, better than mine and is the correct answer. You might consider tidying the example though. 'fieldname' is not a good name for the function's parameter. In fact it might be best to take two one for the element ID and another for the content, i.e.; elemID, content – AnthonyWJones Sep 23 '08 at 16:07
I borrowed fieldName and the ID from the question itself. – Daniel Papasian Sep 23 '08 at 17:00
The question probably used field_name to make the example generic. Also the questioner mentions that Prototype is available but not jQuery. – John Topley Sep 23 '08 at 17:13
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If you're inclined to start using a lot of JavaScript on your site, jQuery makes playing with the DOM extremely simple.

http://docs.jquery.com/Manipulation

Makes it as simple as: $("#field-name").text("Some new text.");

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Prototype has similar utility functions. – ceejayoz Sep 23 '08 at 15:54

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